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Fats Domino
Fats Domino
American R&B musician
1
Dave Bartholomew
Dave Bartholomew
American musician, bandleader, composer, arranger, and record producer
2
Lee Allen
Lee Allen
American saxophonist
3
Allen Toussaint
Allen Toussaint
American musician
4
Paul Gayten
Paul Gayten
American R&B bandleader, pianist, songwriter, producer and record company executive
5
Trombone Shorty
Trombone Shorty
American trombone player
6
Frank Fields
Frank Fields
American musician
7
Ben Pollack
Ben Pollack
American musician
8
Art Rupe
Art Rupe
American music industry executive
9
Boogie Bill Webb
Boogie Bill Webb
American Louisiana blues and R&B guitarist, singer and songwriter
10
Jimmie Noone
Jimmie Noone
American musician
11
Johnny Vincent
Johnny Vincent
American record producer
12
Ivan Neville
Ivan Neville
musician
13
Lloyd Price
Lloyd Price
American singer, songwriter
14
Big Joe Turner
Big Joe Turner
American blues shouter
15
Bud Scott
Bud Scott
American jazz guitarist, banjoist and singer
16
Gerald Wilson
Gerald Wilson
American trumpetist (1918-2014)
17
Jimmy Thomas
Jimmy Thomas
American soul singer-songwriter
18
Kid Ory
Kid Ory
American jazz trombonist
19
Chris Kenner
Chris Kenner
American musician
20
Oscar Pettiford
Oscar Pettiford
American musician
21
Alvin Tyler
Alvin Tyler
American R&B and neo-bop jazz saxophonist and arranger
22
Rockin' Sidney
Rockin' Sidney
musician
23
Huey "Piano" Smith
Huey "Piano" Smith
American musician
24
Christine Kittrell
Christine Kittrell
Singer-songwriter, musician
25
Smiley Lewis
Smiley Lewis
American musician
26
Andre Williams
Andre Williams
American R&B and punk blues musician
27
Champion Jack Dupree
Champion Jack Dupree
American blues pianist
28
Carey Bell
Carey Bell
American blues musician
29
Roy Montrell
Roy Montrell
American musician
30
Ernie Freeman
Ernie Freeman
American musician
31
Jimmy Rogers
Jimmy Rogers
Chicago blues singer, guitarist and harmonica player
32
Little Sonny Jones
Little Sonny Jones
American New Orleans blues singer and songwriter
33
Arthur Adams
Arthur Adams
American blues musician
34
Dr. John
Dr. John
American singer-songwriter (1941-2019)
35
Professor Longhair
Professor Longhair
African-American blues musician
36
Armand Jackson
Armand Jackson
American musician
37
Leon Haywood
Leon Haywood
American singer and songwriter
38
Ray Campi
Ray Campi
American musician
39
Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith
American jazz musician
40
Little Willie Littlefield
Little Willie Littlefield
American R&B pianist and singer
41
L. C. Ulmer
L. C. Ulmer
American blues musician
42
John Mooney
John Mooney
American blues guitarist and singer
43
Galactic
Galactic
band
44
Original Dixieland Jass Band
Original Dixieland Jass Band
American jazz band
45
Jimmy Witherspoon
Jimmy Witherspoon
American jump blues singer
46
Dinah Washington
Dinah Washington
American singer, songwriter, pianist
47
Abram Wilson
Abram Wilson
American trumpeter (1973-2012)
48
Crown Prince Waterford
Crown Prince Waterford
American jazz musician
49
Little Sammy Davis
Little Sammy Davis
American blues musician
50
Humphrey Lyttelton
Humphrey Lyttelton
English jazz trumpeter
51
Walter "Wolfman" Washington
Walter "Wolfman" Washington
American singer and guitarist
52
Theophilus Beckford
Theophilus Beckford
Jamaican pianist
53
Marcia Ball
Marcia Ball
American blues singer and pianist
54
Rockin' Dopsie
Rockin' Dopsie
American musician
55
Billy Hancock
Billy Hancock
American musician
56
Earl Hooker
Earl Hooker
American Chicago blues guitarist
57
Red Allen
Red Allen
American jazz musician, band leader
58
Modern Jazz Quartet
Modern Jazz Quartet
American jazz ensemble
59
Rufus Thomas
Rufus Thomas
American singer (1917-2001)
60
Earl King
Earl King
American songwriter and guitarist
61
James Booker
James Booker
American musician
62
Earl Palmer
Earl Palmer
American drummer
63
Rod Bernard
Rod Bernard
American singer
64
Buckwheat Zydeco
Buckwheat Zydeco
American accordionist
65
Zoot Sims
Zoot Sims
American jazz saxophonist
Jimmy Beasley
American singer

Jimmy Beasley

Intro
American singer
Music

James Edward Beasley (born September 30, 1931) is an American rhythm and blues singer, pianist and songwriter.

Born in Kansas City, Missouri, Beasley learned piano from Willie Rice, and was heavily influenced by Fats Domino. He was also a Golden Gloves winning amateur boxer, and sang in the Aces Quartet and the Sonny Kenner Trio. In 1954, he moved to Los Angeles, and joined King Perry's band, with whom he recorded for Hollywood Records. He also recorded under his own name for the Peacock and Modern labels, in a style similar to Fats Domino.

Although Beasley had no national chart hits, "Ella Jane", recorded with a band that included saxophonists Maxwell Davis and Plas Johnson, and guitarist Rene Hall, sold moderately well, and Beasley regularly played in Los Angeles clubs. Some of Beasley's recordings on Modern, including "Don't Feel Sorry for Me" and "Little Coquette" were recorded in New Orleans in 1956 with Dave Bartholomew's band, and "Little Coquette" was later recorded by Fats Domino. Beasley also backed Etta James at recording sessions in New Orleans.

After having a moderate regional hit with "My Happiness" in 1956, Beasley formed his own band and moved to New York City, where he worked for Alan Freed, performed alongside Ray Charles, Elvis Presley and Ruth Brown, appeared on numerous TV shows, and continued to write for Fats Domino and others. He continued to record for Modern and its subsidiary Crown label, who released an LP, Jimmy's House Party, which was repackaged in 1961 with a slightly different track listing as Twist with Jimmy Beasley. His last recordings, "Ready To Go" / "My Baby's Gone", were released in 1965. His records were among those that influenced the development of ska music in Jamaica.

In the 1970s, Beasley appeared in cabaret in Reno and Las Vegas, and regularly in Laughlin, Nevada. He then moved to Torrance, California, where he owned a club and continued to perform occasionally. He also appeared at blues festivals in Europe in the 1990s, but retired from performing after a stroke in the late 1990s.